Apolline

Meaning of Apolline

In the soft afterglow of myth and morning, Apolline emerges as a name steeped in the ancient light of Apollo—its French syllables, ah-poh-LEEN, embroidered with echoes of sunlit lyres and oracles whispered at Delphi—yet she arrives anew in modern nurseries, chosen fewer than a dozen times in the United States in 2024 (ranked 938), bestowing upon each child a rarefied promise. With roots reaching back to Greco-Roman reverence for beauty, music and healing, Apolline carries within her every dawn’s warmth and the poetic breath of classical verse, even as her playful spirit lingers in the gentle rustle of olive branches and the hush of temple columns. She is both timeless and tenderly fresh, a daughter of light whose name weaves together the grandeur of antiquity and the intimate hope of new beginnings—inviting every bearer to claim her destiny beneath the endless sky.

Pronunciation

French

  • Pronunced as ah-poh-LEEN (/a.pɔ.lin/)

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Similar Names to Apolline

Notable People Named Apolline

Apolline de Malherbe -
Apolline Traoré -
Mariana Castillo Morales
Curated byMariana Castillo Morales

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